Joint Analysis of the DRD5 Marker Concludes Association with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Confined to the Predominantly Inattentive and Combined Subtypes

Naomi Lowe(Trinity College Dublin), Michael Gill(Trinity College Dublin), Fiona Middle(University of Birmingham), Philip Asherson(King's College - North Carolina), Pak C. Sham(University of Hong Kong), Anita Thapar(Centre for Mental Health), Saretta Y. Lee(UNSW Sydney), Antony Payton(University of Wales), Susan L. Smalley(University of California, Los Angeles), Luís Augusto Rohde(Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre), Harvey Wickham, Iris Manor(European Society of Cardiology), Ziarih Hawi(Trinity College Dublin), Jonathan Mill(University of Exeter), Lindsey Kent(University of St Andrews), Aiveen Kirley(Trinity College Dublin), Stephen V. Faraone(SUNY Upstate Medical University), Cathy L. Barr(University Health Network), Richard J. Sinke(University Medical Center Utrecht), Joseph Biederman(Massachusetts General Hospital), Christopher J. Kratochvil(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Y. Yazgan(Türkiye Bilimsel ve Teknolojik Araştırma Kurumu), Timothy G. Stephens(Washington University in St. Louis), Florence Lévy(UNSW Sydney), Shelley D. Smith(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Stan F. Nelson(University of California, Los Angeles), Tatiana Roman(Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul), Karen Wigg(University Health Network), Jan K. Buitelaar(Radboud University Nijmegen), Richard D. Todd(Washington University in St. Louis), Richard P. Ebstein(Southwestern University of Finance and Economics)
The American Journal of Human Genetics
January 26, 2004
Cited by 184


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